(Monday) | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
Welcome | Masterpoints! | Photos | Table Counts | ACBL Live Results |
For 2025 only, our tournament is crammed into 6 days — June 10 to 15. Next year, 2026, we will be back to our usual Monday evening start (June 15th) and finishing on Sunday (June 21st).
Details for 2025: Door Prizes; Winners Prizes; Results; and lots more: Click here
Be prepared for this year’s tournament:
All Entry Fee Payments must use a Credit/Debit Card — no Cash! $21/session, plus $4 for lapsed members. Brand new to ACBL Bridge? Go to www.acbl.org/guest for a free guest membership and ACBL number.
Parking at the Convention Centre is FREE! However, space, particularly in the afternoon, can be limited and we encourage you to enjoy the fine weather and use your feet or ride a bike!
Photos taken for Fun for Free Tuesday through Sunday 4:30 - 6:30pm right next to the Door Prize tables in the Ballroom!
50/50 Draw supporting the Alzheimer’s Society of BC, Tuesday through Saturday at 6:45pm.
Sunday Box Lunches — Order at the Hospitality Desk by Friday, June 13. As usual there is no time to go out for lunch on Sunday. You can bring your own.
We look forward to you joining us at this year’s Penticton Regional Bridge Tournament! It will be a challenge. It will be fun! And, it will be memorable!
Best in Bridge, 2025!
Dave Johnson, Chair, Penticton Regional
Location: Penticton is one of several main cities of the Okanagan region of British Columbia, Canada's westernmost province. The tournament site is the Penticton Trade and Convention Centre in northern Penticton, near the Okanagan Lake waterfront and its many surrounding hotels and motels. Downtown shopping, as well as dozens of hotels, motels and restaurants of all types, are all within a few city blocks, while several larger shopping centres are a short drive away in central and south Penticton. Penticton's climate in early June is usually nice, with very little rain (they warn vociferously on the local weather channels if rain is coming and often it lasts only a few minutes!) and very warm temperatures.
Driving: Penticton is right in the middle of a sequence of south Okanagan communities from Kelowna and West Kelowna in the north, south along highway 97 through Peachland, Summerland, Penticton, then further south through Kaleden, Okanagan Falls, Oliver, and Osoyoos near the U.S. Border. From the west coast most will take the Trans-Canada highway from Vancouver to Hope, then the Coquihalla Highway to Merritt, then east on 97C to the Peachland exit, then south to Penticton, but an alternate route is Highway 3 from Hope to Princeton, east to Keremeos, then north on 3A to Kaleden and then north to Penticton. From the north Okanagan and eastern BC, most will go through Kelowna to West Kelowna and Peachland, then south, but there are other routes. From the USA there are no interstates in northern Washington state, but several highway crossings into the Okanagan region, and Highway 3 on the Canadian side connects Osoyoos, near Oroville WA, to points east and west just north of the border: from Hope and Princeton in the west to Grand Forks and Castlegar and Creston in eastern B.C. This means that you can easily reach Penticton from wherever you choose to cross.
Transit: Penticton Transit has several routes that go past the tournament site, and connects places as far as Cherry Lane Mall, Skaha Lake, and downtown to the Trade and Convention Centre. Some routes go way up the eastern hillside and allow for panoramic views of the city! Other routes go as far as Princeton, Osoyoos and Kelowna, but are much less frequent than the city routes.
Restaurants and Shops: The Trade and Convention Centre is near many local restaurants and shops of all types, some close by, others near the northern beachfront, and many good options a short drive away. Cherry Lane Mall, about 10-15 minutes drive in south central Penticton is the main shopping mall, about 2 km away on Main Street, but there are several other shopping centres. The downtown area has a few small grocery stores but for a large grocery store you will need to travel a bit further.
Tournament Site: Parking in the lots outside the main playing area is free; as the complex expands they have built a bit more parking on the southwest side a short walk from the site. Like most places, Penticton bylaws ask that smokers not smoke near entrance doorways, so let's do our best to comply please.
COVID: ACBL and District policy no longer requires that all players be fully or even partially vaccinated. Masks are not required but players should expect to possibly be asked to wear one if requested by opponents who must supply them. Just as some players are more uncomfortable with strong scents, some have serious concerns about the closeness of players at the table, and courtesy dictates that we do our best to accomodate both. Please co-operate if asked: masks will be available for those without one on hand.
Let's use common sense and remember that while we are all happy to see the end of the mandatory restrictions, COVID is still out there and everyone is still returning to normal at their own pace. Players should stay away from the crowded playing areas when symptoms suddenly develop that might be COVID. Most pharmacies have COVID testing kits available for free if you'd like to be sure before you play. At the same time, let's not ostracize anyone who sneezes or coughs a time or two and trust that they are being as vigilant as we all should.
Slience Those Ringtones Please! While we discuss courtesy (which I have always found in abundance with Okanagan players in many pleasant visits), let's be sure to silence our gadgets. For today's cellphones this means more than simply setting the volume to zero: some phones play alarms and ringtones and connection jingles even if the sound is turned down. ACBL has relaxed the rules on penalties when a ringer goes off, but this shouldn't be happening. The onus is on each of us to discover how to prevent our gadgets from causing unnecessary distractions — not just cellphones: tablets you carry with you, watches that beep every hour, music players that sound a few tones every time they pair with headphones, gadgets you've left inside a coat somewhere, all can be major distractions to someone trying to recall the auction or the cardplay or the conventions they need to remember. Take a moment and find out how to silence all of your gadgets, and get into the habit of doing it before each session, and undoing it afterwards. If you must be 'available,' vibrate mode is entertaining to all (as long as it is set to a level that avoids the production of penalty cards...)! "It's only just the once" is no excuse to the player at the next table who has dropped a key card when your one-time alarm went off. Silence them please.
Another Common Issue: A British tournament director's amusing article about his daily trials included this recurring gag of complaints received from players at roughly the same time, familiar to any tournament director in the world and adjusted here for ACBL play:
"Director, it is far too hot in here. You would think the ACBL could get a decent venue sometimes, considering all the money we spend on them. What are you going to do about it?"
"Director, it is awfully cold in here. You would think the ACBL could get a decent venue sometimes, considering all the money we spend on them. What are you going to do about it?"
Welcome to the Director's Endplay. Here's what I know from experience. We usually* get both complaints in roughly equal proportions. This means that there is a wide variation in perception among players themselves. The majority do not complain and are comfortable with the current temperature. If you are not in the majority and freeze up in air-conditioned space, taking matters into your own hands by opening doors to let in warm air from outside may work temporarily, but eventually the sensors will detect this warm air and compensate for it, making you and others even colder! Modern buildings constantly monitor the temperature and are making the changes you are demanding before you even ask. Even so, a bridge tournament, where at 12:20 there may be 36 people in the playing area and twenty minutes later there may be ten times as many warm bodies affecting the temperature, all changes are gradual. The best solution is to be prepared and have a sweater or jacket with you.
* Usually, but not always. In Osoyoos last May we were faced with a venue where the AC was on August mode in a warm late May. "Fifteen to seventeen" was not a notrump range, it was an estimate of the room temperature in Celsius! By the fourth session, with help from the players, we were out in the hallway where it was a bit dark, but the blasts of cold air couldn't reach us.
Dates, Times, Events, Fees: After a pre-tournament workshop on Tuesday Morning by 2022 North American Teacher of The Year Linda Tuff (preregister with an e-mail to carolgutsell@icloud.com), the 2025 tourament begins on Tuesday at 1:00pm; there is NO BRIDGE on Monday evening or Tuesday morning. This, and other requested or recommended changes, has caused a re-working of the tournament schedule, and it is quite different from last year's version. 9:00 am, 1:00 pm, and 7:00 pm are the start times from Tuesday thru Saturday. Here's the summary:
Players in all games will need to have an ACBL number (even from a membership that has lapsed); those who have never had an ACBL number will need to obtain a free guest membership at this link — be sure to write the seven-digit number the online form gives you. The (Canadian dollars) $21.00 per-session entry fee will have a $4.00 surcharge per session for players whose memberships have lapsed. Paying for entries will be on debit or credit cards only, but you can split payments among multiple cards. It's important to let the seller know what the plan is as we try to process many pairs and teams quickly.
This Web Site: Our plan for the Daily Bulletin site is to provide you with a quick daily digest of the events of the tournament, with links to ACBL Live for each event if you want the complete details and deals. I write (or create software that writes) simple HTML that should render well on computers, tablets, or phone screens of most sizes. We have a group of pages linked together by links bars like this one:
(Monday) | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
Welcome | Masterpoints! | Photos | Table Counts | ACBL Live Results |
(Monday) is inside brackets because there is no bridge on Monday. There is still a page for Monday that contains a few McBruce articles, even though the tournament starts on Tuesday. If you missed the notice and got here a day early, you can do some puzzles and read my guide to tournament procedures and even some basic bridge advice!
Daily Pages: Before the day's events are processed, these will contain a schedule of Today's Events in this order:
There will be details on each event, what type of game it is, what the strat limits are, last year's winners, and a direct link to the ACBL Live results, which will be active following each session. Near the end of each page we will add a list of Tomorrow's Events, in the same format.
At the end of the day Director-In-Charge Matt Koltnow will send me the day's results and I will process them into the website in the early hours of the morning, bit by bit. First, I will update the table count page and masterpoints page, and add that information into the page for the day just completed, removing the Today's Schedule section (since all of those events are now complete) and creating a Preliminary Version. Next is the processing of the results for the day, which in a tournament of this size takes the computer a few minutes as it automates its way through a process which juggles very large files and creates some (a lot of) HTML to add to the results section. A few oddities may fall through the cracks and force me to do a bit of work getting the data that the program was unable to extract, but by 1am or so there should be a final version with all of the results from the day, as well as brackets for incomplete knockouts. Here is what the Final Version of each daily page will contain once the process is complete:
Once a day's results are posted, I may revise it later if there are late scoring corrections. Some browsers save a copy of a page and do not check to see if the content has changed; in most browsers you should be able to hit F5 to reload the page and stop using the one your computer has saved. On tablets there is usually a circular arrow that does the same thing.
Other Pages: You're looking at the Welcome page right now. The Masterpoints! Page, which we call DUMPS (Daily Updated Master Point Summary) will be updated every night first, before the daily pages of results take shape, and will contain the latest masterpoint totals and tournament leaders, both overall and limited to non-Life Masters. Also, they will have everyone's current total broken down into red and gold points, but will not include masterpoints already won in events that have yet to be completed. I've added two more lists that will not change nightly: the complete masterpoint results from the previous District 19 Regional, Victoria in April 2025; and, the final standings of the 2024 Kirkwood Trophy, which covers all District 19 Regionals in a calendar year. The Photos Page will depend on people sending me photos taken (although we may add some information later here; Penticton usually has a dedicated photo taker who sets up in the room where they give out the door prizes so you can't claim one for a win without getting your photo taken!). Now that everyone's cellphone has a camera, anyone can take a photo of winners for the Bulletin! Here is a good guideline on how to get best results:
The Table Counts page puts the attendance data into a colourful HTML table. You can check it out here to see a graphical display of the events of each session, by type, and compare our attendance in 2025 to that of 2024, as best we can considering the changes to the schedule. On the daily pages near the top we'll also be comparing current attendance to the 2019 attendance (3217½ tables!) before the hiatus and hoping to get to 60% of that lofty figure, making the target 1930 tables this time. Maybe we can do even better!
Finally, the ACBL Live link goes to the list of tournament events, from which you will need another click or three to find the one you want. Direct links for each event, even each bracket in the knockouts, are available from the event results on the daily pages and should be quicker.
Thanks for visiting! This is still a work in progress and the progress in getting it where I want it to be continues slowly, but that's web development for you! I should be on the floor directing most days and will be set up somewhere after the evening session putting it all together. Feel free to contact me (see above) with reports of errors or if something isn't working for you.
(Monday) | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
Welcome | Masterpoints! | Photos | Table Counts | ACBL Live Results |